Snow Chick

During two months of blizzards and frigid temperatures dipping to -80 degrees, each male Emperor penguin who breeds in Antarctica must nurture and protect a single egg that harbors his offspring. But once the eggs hatch by midwinter, these dads are ready to move on to their next stage of parenting. Snow Chick imagines the story of the youngest and last chick of the colony to emerge from his shell and the challenges he encounters growing up in the world’s most extreme nursery.

The program follows the ups and downs of what this littlest chick experiences during the first six months of childhood starting from birth through a chick’s journey to the sea. Emperor penguins are the only animals to breed in the Antarctic winter, and keeping the chick warm and fed requires round-the-clock attention from both parents. As the film shows, while one parent keeps a watchful eye on the growing chick, the other is at sea catching fish to store in its stomach before making the 60-mile trek back to the colony so it can feed its hungry child. Although the program focuses on the chick’s adventures, it also relates many of the obstacles the parents must overcome when trekking back and forth across the sea ice to provide this needed nourishment.

Snow Chick tracks the youngster as he follows his mother to learn how to maneuver on the ice and gain confidence walking on his own two feet. It also illustrates what happens when he starts venturing farther afield and his mother loses sight of her plucky offspring. The chick is shown having to dodge the advances of those penguins who failed to breed, whose strong mothering instincts cause them to try and snatch someone else’s child. And as he grows too big to fit into either parent’s pouch, they practice a bit of tough love to persuade their adolescent to socialize with the other chicks and be accepted in their small protective huddles.

The camera captures Snow Chick’s development as he becomes more independent, learns to be on the lookout for predators, and deals with the spring arrival of another penguin species, the feisty Adelies, who want to take over the Emperors’ breeding ground. The saga of the youngest chick concludes as he and the rest of his gang instinctively know that childhood is over and it’s time to head to the sea. That’s where Snow Chick will spend the next four years until returning, like his parents, to the same spot to breed with a partner of his own.

ALBANY, NY (WSKG) - When Governor Cuomo laid out his 2019 agenda earlier this week, he promised that a bill protecting abortion rights for New York’s women would become law by the end of January. Supporters say they are pleased that the measure may finally move, but they say it’s not time to be complacent.

In a career that's encompassed four decades, Tom Stoppard has written many witty, challenging and provocative plays — and the masterpiece among them, many critics feel, is Arcadia, which premiered in London in 1993, came to Broadway in 1995 and opens March 17 in its first New York revival. But like many of Stoppard's plays, Arcadia isn't easily described: He's somehow managed to take on themes as divergent as chaos theory, academic ambition, the second law of thermodynamics, sex and gardening.

ITHACA, NY (WSKG) - The new Farm Bill was passed by Congress last week. A few hours before the vote, Southern Tier Congressman Tom Reed predicted parts of the bill may help small and mid-sized dairy farmers in his 23rd Congressional District. The changes concern an insurance program, called the Margin Protection Program, that pays farmers when the cost of producing milk is greater than the market price.